The Cowboy MEGAPACK ®. Owen Wister
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Название: The Cowboy MEGAPACK ®

Автор: Owen Wister

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Контркультура

Серия:

isbn: 9781434449313

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Music remembered the dead man’s partner, Keno Strudder. A shiver of alarm went through the horse trainer. Where was Keno? What was he up to? Surely Stick and Keno had not parted company for good. They were the kind who worked hand-and-glove in crime.

      “Is Keno guidin’ the nester wagons?” Music asked himself. “If he is, he’ll be along in a couple of days.”

      As he lay resting, he tried to figure it all out. He put himself in the place of the outlaws and imagined what would be the best procedure to steal the buckskins and rob the Conestoga wagons. It was his sudden thirst for water that solved the puzzle. The emigrants would soon need water. Keno might send the men searching for nonexistent springs. That would leave the outlaw alone with the women. It would be an easy matter for him to loot the strong-boxes.

      Music didn’t want to put his weight on his wounded leg, nor was it advisable to ride a bronc. He inched his way to his buckskin mount and, with the aid of a stirrup, pulled himself upward to stand on his good left leg. Unsaddling the mount, he spread his equipment in the shade of a cottonwood.

      Slowly and painfully, Music worked all afternoon, fashioning an Indian travois out of saplings growing near the spring. The rig was nothing more than two long poles, the ends of which were to be attached to a saddle on his mount’s back, while the other ends dragged over the earth. Crosspieces were thonged to the saplings behind the bronc, so that Music would have a place to ride.

      It was not until the next morning, however, that he was able to put the travois to good use. Then he transported Stick’s body to a crevice on the rocky butte behind the spring and buried the killer. Returning to camp, Music cleansed his wound and let the sun treat it as he took a nap. In addition to his own grub, he had acquired a large allotment from Stick Wiley, who had apparently made provision for two—Stick and Keno.

      * * * *

      That night, Music slept without fear of danger. All the next day he rested for his trip. He was figuring that the emigrants would travel about twenty-five miles per day, which now would put them about ten miles from the spring.

      As the sun began to set, Music tried his weight on his wounded leg and found it not too painful. But walking any distance was out of the question. So was riding in the saddle.

      Hiding his gear, he left his four buckskins and Stick’s mount to graze about the oasis. He took to the travois, dragged by his saddle cayuse. It was not difficult to guide his pony by lariat reins. Compass in hand, he started slowly eastward in the direction of Saltville. Soon the North Star gave him guidance from the magnetic section.

      After five miles of travel, he sought a ridge of rock, and there he halted, peering into the eastern night. He was searching for firelight and found it. Not many miles distance there was the reflection of a campfire against a cone of land. Music watched it for long, making certain. Then he started toward the fire in his dragging rig.

      It was getting on toward midnight when he halted and unfastened the poles of the travois. Laboriously he climbed into the saddle. Walking the bronc up a knoll, he looked across a half-mile of desert to the light of a campfire shining against the canvas of three Conestoga wagons.

      “All right, Keno,” Music muttered. “I’m callin’ your gun hand.”

      As Music drew close to the emigrant camp, a hound bayed in the night. Then other dogs took up the alarm. His bronc halted, and Music drew a six-gun.

      He could see several women climbing out of the wagons. Their calls echoed. There were no men. Most likely, as he had figured, the men of the train had gone off searching for water. Now the women were expecting their return. The men would have been guided by the firelight.

      The women quieted the dogs.

      Slowly, gun in hand, Music came through the shadows to the edge of the camp.

      “It’s a rider!” a girl called out, and Music recognized the voice of Marian Ellis.

      Music halted, worried. He had expected to see Keno, but there was no sign of the man. But he didn’t doubt that the gunman was somewhere about. He might be waiting for Stick Wiley.

      Keno certainly would not have gone off with the wagon men.

      A cold grin flitted across Music’s lips, and he dismounted from his bronc.

      “Who is it?” Marian’s voice called again. Music pursed his lips and began to whistle in a low sweet tone. It was his favorite violin piece—“Suwanee River.”

      He saw Marian throw up her head like a wild colt. She hesitated, listening, then suddenly started running toward the shadow of a lone mesquite where he stood.

      “Music!” she called.

      “Marian!” he whispered. “Where’s Keno Strudder?”

      “Oh, I’m so glad you’ve come, Music?” she exclaimed. “We’ve lost all our water and the men have gone looking for a spring. Keno is sick in the main wagon. Our compass is broken. We don’t know where we are!”

      “Shh!” Music cautioned, earing back the hammer of his six-gun to cock. “Keno is not sick. He’s plannin’ to loot the strongbox.”

      Then suddenly through the night came the yell of a small boy. Stubby’s voice:

      “Music! Watch out! Behind you!”

      Quick as a flash, Music’s left arm knocked Marian to the ground. He whirled at the same time, ducking. He was just in time to see a dark shape rear up from behind a black boulder. Music’s six-gun blazed in the darkness. The man behind the boulder screamed and fired a weapon skyward.

      Suddenly there was a thump of boots over the sand, and Stubby arrived.

      “It’s Keno, Music!” the boy cried.

      Music bolstered his weapon and leaned down to help Marian Ellis to her feet.

      “I’m powerful sorry, ma’am,” he apologized. “I never meant to hurt you. I just had to push you away. I’ll never do it ever again.”

      Stubby ran on to the boulder.

      “Hit him right between the eyes, Music!” the boy called back. “I saw him sneak out of the wagon when you come up. I knew it was you when I heard you whistling Suwannee River. I sneaked off from Uncle Joe and joined the train because I knew that Keno and Stick were plannin’ something bad… Do you hear me, Music?”

      Music was paying no attention. Marian was in his arms. And he was telling her that he loved her and that he wanted her more than anything else in the world.

      “Everybody in Saltville knows more about it than we do ourselves,” Music was saying. “I even heard it from Stick Wiley before he died. Yore father must know.”

      “I told him myself,” she said. “I knew you’d come to help us.”

      LONG SAM JUMPS THE DEVIL, by Lee Bond

      For moments after he crawled to edge of the clearing and peered toward the circle of firelight, Long Sam Littlejohn wondered if he was having a nightmare. Certainly what he beheld was reminiscent of hair-raising pirate tales he had read in his youth.

      There СКАЧАТЬ